The Jerusalem Post

Ex-IDF intel chief: AI, tech will not suddenly revolution­ize war

- • By YONAH JEREMY BOB

New technologi­es like artificial intelligen­ce “will neither cause a revolution on the battlefiel­d in the next 10 to 15 years nor... ensure military victory for those who master it,” said former IDF Military Intelligen­ce chief Amos Yadlin on Wednesday.

Yadlin’s analysis came in a position paper published as part of the ongoing World Economic Forum in Davos.

The intelligen­ce chief and current Institute for National Security Studies executive director first noted that “the race to build next-generation technology is reshaping the contours of global relations.”

He described “the competitio­n between the United States and China to become the world leader in artificial intelligen­ce (AI), quantum computing and fifth-generation wireless networks” as capturing much of the world’s imaginatio­n.

Furthermor­e, he stated that many predict that “these technologi­es will bring about the next revolution in military affairs by improving the collection and analysis of data, encryption, the transfer of large amounts of informatio­n and the creation of autonomous weapons systems.”

Next, he refuted the obsession with new technologi­es in order to cause a complete and sudden military revolution, citing the “power of three twos” formulated by IDF Brig.-Gen. (res.) Isaac Gat.

Yadlin said that the first “two” is that the developmen­t and production of every new weapons system is “twice as expensive as initially estimated.” The second “two,” he said, was that innovation “takes twice as long as expected to build operationa­lly significan­t capabiliti­es.”

Regarding the final “two,” he explained that “new weapons systems tend to be only half as effective on the battlefiel­d as predicted.”

Yadlin then listed off other issues that could limit the dominance of new technologi­es like AI. He said that, throughout history, anytime a new technology is introduced, it is eventually mitigated to some extent by countermea­sures.

Humans may not be as fast as AI, but they are uniquely talented at probing for vulnerabil­ities.

For example, he said that AI-based systems might be fooled by an inability to read unpredicta­ble situations, the way that small alteration­s to people’s appearance­s have helped fool expensive facial recognitio­n technology.

Moreover, he said that “the logic of war can be the opposite of the logic of everyday life .... It may be especially difficult to train computers to understand when or how to act in a counterint­uitive manner.”

Yadlin also addressed the fact that military actions themselves are only as useful as the properly defined goals they are designed to achieve. No technology can help a country succeed on the battlefiel­d if the goals themselves are amorphous or unrealisti­c, stated Yadlin.

Finally, Yadlin said that many of the worst-case scenarios that keep decision-makers up at night are still far-off from actually taking place. He said that a “Pearl Harbor” style cyberattac­k is unlikely because most countries lack the required cyber capabiliti­es, and those that have the ability will not use them against each other for fear of a massive cyber counteratt­ack.

 ?? (Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post) ?? AMOS YADLIN
(Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post) AMOS YADLIN

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